3,884 research outputs found
Diquark properties and their role in hadrons
Diquark correlations are important in baryons, which can be modeled as
quark-diquark bound states. In addition, diquarks could play a role in
non-standard hadrons such as tetraquarks and pentaquarks. Here, we obtain
properties of these diquarks from the corresponding bound state equation, using
a model for the effective quark-quark interaction that has proved successful in
the light meson sector. Subsequently, we use the same model to estimate the
masses of the lightest diquark-diquark and diquark-antidiquark states.Comment: 3 pages, 2 .eps figures, contribution to the proceedings of the 19th
European Conference on Few-Body Problems in Physics, Groningen, the
Netherlands, Aug. 200
Effective masses of diquarks
We study meson and diquark bound states using the rainbow-ladder truncation
of QCD's Dyson-Schwinger equations. The infrared strength of the rainbow-ladder
kernel is described by two parameters. The ultraviolet behavior is fixed by the
one-loop renormalization group behavior of QCD, which ensures the correct
asymptotic behavior of the Bethe-Salpeter amplitudes and brings important
qualitative benefits. The diquark with the lowest mass is the scalar, followed
by the axialvector and pseudoscalar diquark. This ordering can be anticipated
from the meson sector.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Few-Body System
Hadron Physics and the Dyson--Schwinger Equations of QCD
We use the Bethe-Salpeter equation in rainbow-ladder truncation to calculate
the ground state mesons from the chiral limit to bottomonium, with an effective
interaction that was previously fitted to the chiral condensate and pion decay
constant. Our results are in reasonable agreement with the data, as are the
vector and pseudoscalar decay constants. The meson mass differences tend to
become constant in the heavy-quark limit. We also present calculations for the
pion and rho electromagnetic form factors, and for the single-quark form
factors of the \eta_c and J/\psi.Comment: 7 pages, 5 postscript figures, contribution to the proceedings of
QCHS7, Ponta Delgada, Sept. 200
The quark-photon vertex and meson electromagnetic form factors
The ladder Bethe-Salpeter solution for the dressed photon-quark vertex is
used to study the low-momentum behavior of the pion electromagnetic and the
transition form factors. With model parameters
previously fixed by light meson masses and decay constants, the low-momentum
slope of both form factors is in excellent agreement with the data. In
comparison, the often-used Ball-Chiu Ansatz for the vertex is found to be
deficient; less than half of the obtained is generated by that Ansatz
while the remainder of the charge radius could be attributed to the tail of the
resonance.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, uses espcrc1.sty, talk presented at PANIC99,
Uppsala, Swede
Strong Decays of Light Vector Mesons
The vector meson strong decays rho-->pi pi, phi-->KK, and K^star-->pi K are
studied within a covariant approach based on the ladder-rainbow truncation of
the QCD Dyson--Schwinger equation for the quark propagator and the
Bethe--Salpeter equation for the mesons. The model preserves the one-loop
behavior of QCD in the ultraviolet, has two infrared parameters, and implements
quark confinement and dynamical chiral symmetry breaking. The 3-point decay
amplitudes are described in impulse approximation. The Bethe--Salpeter study
motivates a method for estimating the masses for heavier mesons within this
model without continuing the propagators into the complex plane. We test the
accuracy via the rho, phi and K^{star} masses and then produce estimates of the
model results for the a_1 and b_1 masses as well as the mass of the proposed
exotic vector pi_1(1400).Comment: Submitted for publication; 10x2-column pages, REVTEX 4, 3 .eps files
making 3fig
Confinement Phenomenology in the Bethe-Salpeter Equation
We consider the solution of the Bethe-Salpeter equation in Euclidean metric
for a qbar-q vector meson in the circumstance where the dressed quark
propagators have time-like complex conjugate mass poles. This approximates
features encountered in recent QCD modeling via the Dyson-Schwinger equations;
the absence of real mass poles simulates quark confinement. The analytic
continuation in the total momentum necessary to reach the mass shell for a
meson sufficiently heavier than 1 GeV leads to the quark poles being within the
integration domain for two variables in the standard approach. Through Feynman
integral techniques, we show how the analytic continuation can be implemented
in a way suitable for a practical numerical solution. We show that the would-be
qbar-q width to the meson generated from one quark pole is exactly cancelled by
the effect of the conjugate partner pole; the meson mass remains real and there
is no spurious qbar-q production threshold. The ladder kernel we employ is
consistent with one-loop perturbative QCD and has a two-parameter infrared
structure found to be successful in recent studies of the light SU(3) meson
sector.Comment: Submitted for publication; 10.5x2-column pages, REVTEX 4, 3
postscript files making 3 fig
Differences between heavy and light quarks
The quark Dyson-Schwinger equation shows that there are distinct differences
between light and heavy quarks. The dynamical mass function of the light quarks
is characterised by a sharp increase below 1 GeV, whereas the mass function of
the heavy quarks is approximately constant in this infrared region. As a
consequence, the heavy-meson masses increase linearly with the current-quark
masses, whereas the light pseudoscalar meson masses are proportional to the
square root of the current-quark masses.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Contribution to the IVth International Workshop
on Progress in Heavy Quark Physics, 20-22 Sept. 1997, Rostoc
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